(Sorry that I haven’t been scheduled to work on gnome-initial-setup
until this week.)

For what it’s worth, after trying this out in Cosmic, I think this
screen should be removed. This is for the reason that’s been at the
start of the Online Accounts spec since August 2013: “The purpose of
Online Accounts in Ubuntu is to simplify the overall experience, by
reducing your need to enter sign-in details for an online service in
multiple apps. This time saving comes at a cost: the mental complexity
of dealing with a separate thing, ‘Online Accounts’. Therefore, Online
Accounts should be involved only where it is reasonably likely to save
time.” <https://wiki.ubuntu.com/OnlineAccounts?action=recall&rev=10>

When someone has not yet used any of Ubuntu’s installed apps, likely
doesn’t know what apps are installed, probably doesn’t know what kinds
of account each app works with, and almost certainly doesn’t know
whether any of those apps use Online Accounts — inviting them to
“Connect Your Online Accounts” is much, much more likely to waste time
than to save it.

For example, if someone has a Gmail or Outlook.com account, and sees
this screen, they would quite reasonably think that setting up their
Google or Microsoft account would set up their e-mail. Only after
completing the first-login setup would they discover that Ubuntu doesn’t
even ship an e-mail app. And when they check their e-mail in Firefox
instead — or if they always check their e-mail on the Web anyway — they
would discover that Firefox completely ignores the account they set up,
so they have to sign in all over again.

A second example: If someone uses Google Photos, they might reasonably
think that “Connect your accounts to easily access your … photos” was a
true statement. Only after adding their Google account, and completing
the first-login setup, would they discover that it was not true:
Shotwell has no “Data Imports” plugins installed by default, and when
publishing, even if they guess that publishing to “Picasa Web Albums”
(which hasn’t existed since 2016) is the correct choice for Google
Photos, Shotwell completely ignores the account they set up, so they
have to sign in all over again.

A third, and perhaps the most flagrant, example: If someone has a
Facebook account, they might reasonably think that setting it up here
would do something useful. As far as I can tell, it does nothing useful
with *any* default apps, and when they visit Facebook in Firefox they
have to sign in all over again.

This is not a criticism of our choice of default apps, or of their
levels of integration. Software is often imperfect and incomplete. But
that’s one of the reasons you should never be invited — whether at first
login, or at any other time — to set up Online Accounts outside of a
particular app. The only time you should be invited to set up an account
is when an app, that you are currently using, tells you that it would
actually do something useful. Because the only benefit, of Online
Accounts, is that you won’t need to sign in if you happen to use a
*second* app that tells you it can do something useful with that
account. Inviting people to set up an account, when they can’t be
expected to know that there are not two, not one, but *zero* apps that
use it, is just wasting everybody’s time.

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1762192

Title:
  Ubuntu Welcome could offer to set up Online Accounts

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